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brettworks

thinking through music


  • April 3, 2013

    On The Influence Of One’s Musical Teachers

    In his New Yorker piece “Every Good Boy Does Fine”, pianist Jeremy Denk reflects on taking piano lessons from the time he first took up the instrument at the age five through his college years. Denk’s teachers helped him learn to better practice, interpret and think musically. “Learning to play the piano” says Denk, “is… Continue reading

    ecstasy of influence, musical enculturation, musical memoirs, musical technique, pedagogy, performance
  • March 29, 2013

    Notes On A Talk By Robert Fripp

    On a whim I searched Spotify for music by Robert Fripp but found none. Instead there was a recording of him speaking to a crowd about various musical things. And it was good. “Music never goes away” he said, “It’s always available, but we are not always available to music.” And when pushed to say… Continue reading

    aesthetics, poetry
    good music, robert fripp
  • March 25, 2013

    Some Observations On Atoms For Peace’s “Unless”

    Thom Yorke’s musical project, Atoms For Peace, brought together a number of fine musicians to jam out and record rhythmically propulsive grooves which Yorke and the producer Nigel Godrich then edited together. The result, AMOK, is a lean, hybrid acoustic-electronic work that has been described in The Guardian as “surprisingly accessible for one so extensively… Continue reading

    Uncategorized
  • March 19, 2013

    On Musical Invention, Sound And Process: “Bladelores” From Autechre’s Exai

    No one is quite sure how the UK duo Autechre make their electronic music. Sure, they use software and computers, they program, they use hardware synths and drum machines and samplers, they improvise, they code, they make beats, they tweak, but we really don’t know how they work. Not only is the group’s musical sum… Continue reading

    Electronic music, enchantment, listening, musical process
    autechre, electronic dance music, electronic music
  • March 7, 2013

    On The Strange Poetics Of Spam

    For some reason, lately my blog inbox has been inundated with spam. (I’ve written previously about spam here.) My irritation swiftly turned to anger at the sheer automated idiocy of it. Where is all this stuff, all this fake human fakery coming from? How is it generated and who is profiting from it? And I… Continue reading

    poetry
  • March 5, 2013

    On Another Kind Of Wonder

    My new recording, Another Kind Of Wonder, is available now. Here is the first track, “Splash”: The recording is available at cdbaby. Continue reading

    Electronic music
    music
  • March 1, 2013

    On Portlandia’s Music-Cultural Critiques

    The sketch comedy series Portlandia, starring Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein and now in its third season, humorously riffs on social life in Portland, Oregon. The show skewers–or is it homage?–a range of Portlander-types, from self-employed creatives to self-absorbed nouveau yuppies to touchy-feely uber-alternative characters almost beyond precise description. Portlandia excels at noticing the many… Continue reading

    humor, music and identity, musical sociality
    comedy, music
  • February 26, 2013

    On Pantha Du Prince And Bell Laboratory’s Elements Of Light

    “I think techno music at the moment is just an infrastructure. Basically, it’s not a musical term anymore. It used to be more like straight, technical funk. Nowadays, it is more of an infrastructure where you have certain beat patterns that you can call techno music. But in the end, it’s a social and economic infrastructure. The name… Continue reading

    bells, ecstasy of influence, Electronic music, four-on-the-floor, groovology, percussion
    music
  • February 19, 2013

    On Timing And The Nature Of Blogging

    Recently I’ve been experimenting with timers–using countdown apps on my phone to time whatever it is I’m working on. Lest you think I’m one of those people who are overly into the analytics of timing everything–I’m not (yet). No, I’m one of those people who generally loses track of time and looks up to marvel at… Continue reading

    time
    mental-health
  • February 16, 2013

    Microthought: On Harold Budd’s “Bandits Of Stature”

    I listened to the composer’s music solitary while riding the subway– not multitasking, not otherwise occupied. And so the thought came to occupy me, unfolding in slow phrases: What do we value in music? What of its values occupy us? What aural codes do we enjoy resonating with? As I listened to the composer’s music… Continue reading

    listening, microthoughts
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Thomas Brett is a musician and writer who holds a PhD in ethnomusicology from New York University. He is the author of Principles of Electronic Music Production and The Creative Electronic Music Producer, a book described by Sound On Sound magazine as “a deep philosophical analysis of the various creative inspirations, ideas and processes involved in producing electronic music.” His essays have appeared in the journals Popular Music and Popular Music and Society, as well as edited collections by Routledge, Oxford, and Cambridge University presses. Thomas has played percussion on Broadway since 1997 and writes about music at brettworks.com.

Recent Posts

  • Same Walk, Different Music: Actress, Suzanne Ciani, “Concrète Waves London B2” (2026).
  • Brett’s Sound Picks: Actress and Suzanne Ciani’s “Concrète Waves Barcelona B4” (2026)
  • The Real, The Virtual, and Thinking Compositionally
  • No. 6
  • Art About Music: “When Is That Young Man Going Home?” (1931)

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